Accountability: a report card
11 Jan 2007 23:53:25 GMT
Source: HPN
The story of humanitarian accountability is not yet one of success.
After more than a decade of debate about performance, standards and giving beneficiaries a say, accountability problems continue to plague international disaster responses. A sector-wide study by the
Tsunami Evaluation Coalition, published in July 2006, concluded that poor accountability to affected populations was a significant problem in the response to the Indian Ocean tsunami, and the UN
Special Envoy for Tsunami Recovery, Bill Clinton, has launched an 'intensive review' into accountability to beneficiaries. According to Save the Children, aid workers are still trading food aid for
sex with young girls in Liberia several years after this unacceptable practice was originally discovered. Displaced people in Darfur have told the Humanitarian Accountability Partnership (HAP)
that they feel undervalued by NGOs, know little about what these organisations are trying to achieve, and therefore do not cooperate with them. A survey of 320 informed individuals,
conducted by HAP in March 2006, showed a majority view that relief agencies were unaccountable to intended beneficiaries. Some 81% of respondents said the quality of accountability to beneficiaries
was 'low' or 'medium' while 82% said that accountability to official donors was 'high'.